Rose was an only child. Her only sibling, a brother, had died in childbirth. Her parents had been among those who helped settle midwest America. Oh, the stories they could tell! Her father, a farmer, had been left crippled after a bout with diphtheria as a young adult. Her mother began a career as a very young woman as a teacher in a one-room schoolhouse. As Rose grew and matured, she continued the educational path and became a writer. She wrote articles for newspapers and magazines, a practice begun by her mother. Rose became a well known journalist. A skilled writer, she would later also write several novels.
Rose began to encourage her mother to record the wonderful stories of her youth growing up in a pioneer family. Her mother had produced only one story through the years. Rose, by then a professional journalist, encouraged and assisted her mother with the writing and editing. In 1932, when she was 65 years of age, Rose's mother published her first book--a success! Over the next eleven years, mother and daughter would collaborate to write seven more books. The world had been given a gift--the series we know as "Little House on the Prairie" that began with "The Little House in the Big Woods". Rose Wilder Lane was the daughter of Laura Ingalls Wilder.
Welcome to Pens and Pages! We enjoy learning how to write, and it is a pleasure to associate with other writers. Please look around, and we hope that you will enjoy the fun exercises here, the samples from other writers, and the fellowship. Only a few of us are published (and self-published at that) so don't be embarrassed to try. Please look around and...enjoy!
Our Mission Statement:
The mission of Pens & Pages Writers Guild is to facilitate and encourage writers of all genres, to share resources and tips about the writing process and, most of all, to provide a positive and productive forum that will encourage and support each writer in his or her creative endeavors.
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2 comments:
As George Eliot is quoted as saying, "It is never too late to be what you might have been."
Love the quote Theresa Wiza!
Darla, I love Laura Ingalls Wilder's stories. Thank you for sharing the story behind the books.
~Solard
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